The lives of the owner of a house-painting business and a teen runaway intersect in Barrett’s comic novel.
Waking up next to a dead woman would unsettle most people. But 31-year-old Sammy Davis Junior (Junior is his surname) is more worried about making it to Saturday brunch. His apparent apathy regarding the late bedmate—his regular hookup for the past month—makes South Tampa Det. O’Hare suspicious. Elsewhere, Penny Sullivan, torn up by guilt over her big sister, Catelyn’s death, has run away from home to evade boarding school. The 15-year-old travels under her sister’s name and feigns the background of a Canadian backpacker. Looking for a place to squat, Penny enters the orbit of a house-painting crew, a business Sammy and his two friends have run since high school. As she joins them on a multiday gig at the same location where she’s secretly bunking, Penny unexpectedly bonds with the older men. They play silly games, like dreaming up the most offbeat haiku, and execute well-planned pranks on local businesses. Penny and Sammy are more alike than either of them realizes; they both have father issues—Penny is certain her father doesn’t care about her, and Sammy resists taking over the multinational family business, despite his father’s wishes. The two must come to terms with their personal relationships as well as their more practical circumstances, as people are searching for Penny, and Sammy, even with his father’s “expensive lawyers,” is still tied to someone’s death.
Barrett’s story definitely has its share of morbid humor—despite the body in his bed, Sammy is blasé during the detective’s interview: “I think we’re all pretty shaken up by this whole scene,” he says. “So, I can go now?” Lowbrow jokes also pop up on occasion, including a particularly gross scene involving beer that no one should drink. The characters practically burst with personality, especially Penny, Sammy, and Sammy’s co-owners, Mealy and Beer. Penny, who’s lost both her mom and sister, has no friends, and these men offer the camaraderie that she needs. Most of their pranks, even when they cause a ruckus at a deli or a fast-food restaurant, are genuinely funny and not malicious. As much of the bonding between Penny and the crew occurs while they’re painting a house, dialogue-laden scenes are abundant. These are moments for characters to pass the time with games and trading off quips, but the author doesn’t neglect to develop the story as well, as Penny seems to gain a fondness for Mealy, who shows her kindness from the very beginning. All of that dialogue, presented in brief chapters alternating between narrators Penny and Sammy, stokes the brisk narrative pace. The final act effectively wraps up the protagonists’ individual stories, though Penny’s is the more convincing and rewarding of the two. The denouement is a bit of a swerve but unquestionably memorable.
An absorbing tale of friendship that’s endearing as often as it’s unabashedly riotous.